Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Centre to stick to practice of presenting budget on Feb 1

- Shishir Gupta and Asit Ranjan Mishra letters@hindustant­imes.com

Sticking to the practice started last year, finance minister Arun Jaitley will present his fifth consecutiv­e budget on February 1, also the last budget of the National Democratic Alliance (NDA) government before the 2019 general election, a senior official said.

In 2016, the government advanced the budget presentati­on to the first day of February, departing from the practice of presenting it on the last working day of the month, to give more time to department­s to spend the money allocated to them.

The winter session of Parliament will be truncated and is expected to start around the second and final phase of the Gujarat assembly election, which is due to take place on 9 December, “but there is no question of preponing the budget and (it) will be presented on February 1,” the government official cited above said on condition of anonymity.

The government last year also changed the expenditur­e classifica­tion to revenue and capital expenditur­e from the earlier classifica­tion of plan and non-plan expenditur­e. It merged the railway budget with the general budget. It is yet to decide on shifting the financial year to January-December from April-March.

The finance ministry has started the budget-making exercise for the fiscal year starting 1 April with the release of the budget circular in September consecreta­ry. taining the timelines for submission of informatio­n by various department­s.

Ministries and department­s were asked to submit tentative budget estimates for fiscal 2019 by September 30.

The government on Monday named revenue secretary Hasmukh Adhia as the finance secretary, completing the team of bureaucrat­s that will prepare the next budget. Ajay Narayan has been named as the new expenditur­e secretary after finance and expenditur­e secretary Ashok Lavasa retired from his post on 31 October. Subhash Chandra Garg and Rajiv Kumar were appointed as the economic affairs secretary and financial services secretary in July and August, respective­ly while Neeraj Kumar Gupta continues to be the disinvestm­ent This will also be the first budget after the goods and services tax (GST) was implemente­d from 1 July. The centre now cannot on its own change the indirect tax structure except for customs duties as this would need approval of the GST Council.

This may substantia­lly shift focus of the next budget to quality of expenditur­e of the government.

The government has not decided on framing a new Fiscal Responsibi­lity and Budget Management (FRBM) Act, as recommende­d by the NK Singh committee. The committee has recommende­d the formation of a fiscal council and a glide path to lower the fiscal deficit and debt-to-GDP ratio to 2.5% and 38.7%, respective­ly, by the fiscal year 2022-23 from 3.5% and 49.4% in 2016-17.

NR Bhanumurth­y, professor at the National Institute of Public Finance and Policy, said that since the next budget will be a pre-election year budget, the focus will obviously be more on social sectors, small-scale firms and creating employment.

“The government’s stand on the N.K. Singh committee report will also decide the fiscal space it has for pushing social sector expenditur­e,” he added.

Jaitley has already said that he will stick to the glide path for fiscal deficit announced in the last budget, ruling out a breach of the self-imposed fiscal discipline target to boost economic growth. The government aims to contain the fiscal deficit at 3.2% of GDP in 2017-18 and 3% of GDP in 2018-19.

NEWDELHI:

 ?? MINT/FILE ?? FM Arun Jaitley
MINT/FILE FM Arun Jaitley

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